Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University English Theses Department of English Summer 8-11-2011 Reading 9/11 in 21st Century Apocalyptic Horror Films Colby D. Williams Georgia State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_theses Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Williams, Colby D., "Reading 9/11 in 21st Century Apocalyptic Horror Films." Thesis, Georgia State University, 2011. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_theses/116 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of English at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in English Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. READING 9/11 IN 21ST CENTURY APOCALYPTIC HORROR FILMS by COLBY D. WILLIAMS Under the Direction of Calvin Thomas ABSTRACT The tragedy and aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks are reflected in American apocalyptic horror films that have been produced since 2001. Because the attacks have occurred only within the past ten years, not much research has been conducted on the effects the attacks have had on the narrative and technological aspects of apocalyptic horror. A survey of American apocalyptic horror will include a brief synopsis of the films, commentary on dominant visual allusions to the 9/11 attacks, and discussion of how the attacks have thematically influenced the genre. The resulting study shows that the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, have shaped American apocalyptic horror cinema as shown through imagery, characters, and thematic focus of the genre. INDEX WORDS: 9/11, Apocalypse, American cinema, Apocalyptic horror film READING 9/11 IN 21ST CENTURY APOCALYPTIC HORROR FILMS by COLBY D. WILLIAMS A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree oF Master of Arts in the College of Arts and Sciences Georgia State University 2011 Copyright by Colby Dylan Williams 2011 READING 9/11 IN 21ST CENTURY APOCALYPTIC HORROR FILMS by COLBY D. WILLIAMS Committee Chair: Calvin Thomas Committee: Pearl McHaney Nancy Chase Electronic Version Approved: Office of Graduate Studies College of Arts and Sciences Georgia State University August 2011 iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Dr. Calvin Thomas, Dr. Nancy Chase, and Dr. Pearl McHaney deserve much praise, for without their guidance, advice, and direction, this thesis would never have made it off of the ground. Also deserving much recognition is Patricia Chapman; her ability to help calm stressed out graduates knows no limits. I would also like to thank Scott Honeycutt for his enduring friendship and long apocalyptic rambles. v TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS iv LIST OF FIGURES vi 1. INTRODUCTION 1 2. DEFINING APOCALYPTIC HORROR 6 3. THE GENRE IN THE DECADE PRIOR TO 9/11 11 4. THE GENRE AFTER 9/11 14 4.1 Right at Your Door (2006) 14 4.2 Knowing (2009) 17 4.3 Cloverfield (2008) 20 4.4 War of the Worlds (2005) 27 4.5 I Am Legend (2007) 31 4.6 The Road (2009) 35 5. RETHINKING APOCALYPTIC HORROR AFTER 9/11 37 6. THE FUTURE OF THE GENRE AND THE RESEARCH 45 7. BIBLIOGRAPHY 47 vi LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1: Right At Your Door, Lionsgate, 2006 16 Figure 2: Ash clouds as the towers fall. Courtesy of 9/11 Digital Archives 20 Figure 3: Knowing, Summit Entertainment, 2009 20 Figure 4: New Yorkers emerging. Courtesy of 9/11 Digital Archives 20 Figure 5: Knowing, Summit Entertainment, 2009 20 Figure 6: Cloverfield, Paramount, 2008 24 Figure 7: New Yorkers’ exodus. Courtesy of 9/11 Digital Archives 24 Figure 8: Cloverfield, Paramount, 2008 24 Figure 9: Remnants of Twin Towers. Courtesy of 9/11 Digital Archives 24 Figure 10: War of the Worlds, Paramount, 2005 30 Figure 11: Panic-stricken New Yorkers. Courtesy of 9/11 Digital Archives 30 Figure 12: I Am Legend, Warner Bros. Pictures, 2007 32 Figure 13: Abandoned New York City street. Courtesy of 9/11 Digital Archives 32 1 INTRODUCTION A New Yorker, running for his life as his fellow New Yorkers around him scream in terror, retreats from a violent explosion as ash and debris rain down from the sky. A camera pans across an abandoned city street void of any human activity and reveals buildings in ruin, cars left unattended, and rudimentary posters, faded with time and weather, clinging to telephone polls. A young woman screams in horror as a well- known New York landmark is destroyed. At first glance, the aforementioned horrifying scenes may appear to indicate the aftermath of terrorist attacks in New York on that now infamous date – 9/11, and for obvious reasons. As the attacks unfolded, and Americans viewed the attacks and the subsequent aftermath on television, iconic images became ingrained in the American psyche: a firefighter pouring a bottle of water over his ash-caked face, two complete strangers grasping each other as they look on in horror at bodies falling from the towers, and businessmen and women run for their lives as they attempt to evade the debris cloud curling between buildings and alleys. But the former scenes, while they may appear as realistic images of the horrors of 9/11, emanate not from the attacks themselves, but from a source that the terrorist attacks have influenced and shaped for the past ten years – American apocalyptic horror cinema. 2 The subgenre of apocalyptic horror, disturbingly enough, proves extraordinarily relevant to a post-9/11 society. A category of film that bases its existence upon end-time scenarios and eschatological fears, apocalyptic horror has long dealt with any given culture’s anxieties as it confronts its demise. Such cultural demise has become strikingly apparent in the days, months, and years following the terrorist attacks. As Charles Derry asserts in his reissue of Dark Dreams 2.0, “we’ve been punished psychologically […] one irrevocable horror is that the images from that day are trapped inside us, a permanent part of who we now are. And then later…more images of horror: in Afghanistan, in Iraq, in Abu Ghraib, in London, in Madrid” (345). Additionally, in the years following 9/11, drastic changes have taken place across the American cultural landscape; the loss of privacies resulting from the creation of the Patriot Act, the large political shifts brought forth by both the Bush and Obama administrations, and the frightening confrontation between the largely Christianized West and the distant Islamic world – proof of political scientist Samuel Huntington’s theory concerning the clash of civilizations – all have given rise to significant cultural anxieties since 2001. In apocalyptic horror, such anxieties play out in numerous ways – through characters, plot, method of extinction (or near-extinction), and post-apocalyptic social environment. Because of the richness of this particular cinematic genre, a richness that owes itself mainly to a culture’s sociopolitical zeitgeist, study of the apocalyptic horror film can provide us with some answers to exactly how and why we 3 act as we do whenever we face our darkest fears. An investigation of how the tragedy and aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks have been reflected in American apocalyptic horror films produced after 2001 is long overdue. While much attention has been given to other horror subgenres, academia continues to look away from end of time narratives. This is not to say that the cinematic studies have failed to develop the link between 9/11 and American film. Scholars such as Kyle Bishop have devoted much time and energy to studying the link between 9/11 and the relatively recent resurgence of the zombie film. In his essay “Dead Man Still Walking: Explaining the Zombie Renaissance,” Bishop investigates the “marked rise in all kinds of zombie narratives over the past ten years,” and posits that the 9/11 terror attacks have “caused the largest wave of paranoia for Americans since the McCarthy era” (17). Likewise, Christopher Sharrett’s article on what has been pejoratively labeled as “torture porn” provides an excellent perspective on how the War on Terror has helped fuel an American taste for severe physical mutilation within this new realm of horror. Yet despite these critical developments, apocalyptic horror has gone largely untouched. I will contend that 9/11 has greatly affected American apocalyptic cinema in the following ways: the manner in which the world is brought to an end, the enemy (or enemies) that brings about this end, and how the characters deal with one another after the apocalyptic event has taken place. 4 Before analyzing post-9/11 apocalyptic horror, one must review the cinematic tastes of American audiences immediately following the attacks. American audiences desired a taste of the end in the months and years following the attacks. This assertion, however, has been met with objection. Some argued that subsequent to the tragedy, horror would face a slow but sure decline. Columnist John Dempsey addressed the reluctance of many media outlets when it came to showing any form of excessive violence. According to these proponents, the public, shocked by the recent events, would begin to shy away from cinematic thrillers and horrors; in a September 16, 2001 article, Dempsey noted “USA [network’s] move to clear its [schedule] of programming that may be inappropriate in the wake of terrorist attacks on New York and Washington parallels similar decisions by other general-entertainment networks, particularly those that schedule lots of movies” (Variety.com). As a result, Dempsey proceeded to relate that some outlets opted to forego films such as Lethal Weapon and Sniper and instead show more family-friendly fare such as Look Who’s Talking. Shortly after Dempsey’s article, Entertainment Weekly’s Jeff Gordinier hinted that the attacks would usher in a new era which would witness the “end of irony” (Gordinier), proposing that even comedies would decline in popularity.
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